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Dive into the research topics where Bernadine Donahue is active.

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Featured researches published by Bernadine Donahue.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2006

Phase III Study of Craniospinal Radiation Therapy Followed by Adjuvant Chemotherapy for Newly Diagnosed Average-Risk Medulloblastoma

Roger J. Packer; Amar Gajjar; Gilbert Vezina; Lucy B. Rorke-Adams; Peter C. Burger; Patricia L. Robertson; Lisa Bayer; Deborah Lafond; Bernadine Donahue; Maryanne H. Marymont; Karin M. Muraszko; James Langston; Richard Sposto

PURPOSE To determine the event-free survival (EFS) and overall survival of children with average-risk medulloblastoma and treated with reduced-dose craniospinal radiotherapy (CSRT) and one of two postradiotherapy chemotherapies. METHODS Four hundred twenty-one patients between 3 years and 21 years of age with nondisseminated medulloblastoma (MB) were prospectively randomly assigned to treatment with 23.4 Gy of CSRT, 55.8 Gy of posterior fossa RT, plus one of two adjuvant chemotherapy regimens: lomustine (CCNU), cisplatin, and vincristine; or cyclophosphamide, cisplatin, and vincristine. Results Forty-two of 421 patients enrolled were excluded from analysis. Sixty-six of the remaining 379 patients had incompletely assessable postoperative studies. Five-year EFS and survival for the cohort of 379 patients was 81% +/- 2.1% and 86% +/- 9%, respectively (median follow-up over 5 years). EFS was unaffected by sex, race, age, treatment regimen, brainstem involvement, or excessive anaplasia. EFS was detrimentally affected by neuroradiographic unassessability. Patients with areas of frank dissemination had a 5-year EFS of 36% +/- 15%. Sixty-seven percent of progressions had some component of dissemination. There were seven second malignancies. Infections occurred more frequently on the cyclophosphamide arm and electrolyte abnormalities were more common on the CCNU regimen. CONCLUSION This study discloses an encouraging EFS rate for children with nondisseminated MB treated with reduced-dose craniospinal radiation and chemotherapy. Additional, careful, step-wise reductions in CSRT in adequately staged patients may be possible.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2005

Multiagent Chemotherapy and Deferred Radiotherapy in Infants With Malignant Brain Tumors: A Report From the Children’s Cancer Group

J. Russell Geyer; Richard Sposto; Mark Jennings; James M. Boyett; Richard A. Axtell; David Breiger; Emmett Broxson; Bernadine Donahue; Jonathan L. Finlay; Joel W. Goldwein; Linda Heier; Dennis L. Johnson; Claire Mazewski; Douglas C. Miller; Roger J. Packer; Diane Puccetti; Jerilynn Radcliffe; May Lin Tao; Tania Shiminski-Maher

PURPOSE To evaluate response rate, event-free survival (EFS), and toxicity of two chemotherapeutic regimens for treatment of children younger than 36 months with malignant brain tumors and to estimate control intervals without irradiation in children with no residual tumor after initial surgery and induction chemotherapy and with delayed irradiation in patients with residual tumor or metastatic disease at diagnosis. PATIENTS AND METHODS Patients were randomly assigned to one of two regimens of induction chemotherapy (vincristine, cisplatin, cyclophosphamide, and etoposide v vincristine, carboplatin, ifosfamide, and etoposide). Maintenance chemotherapy began after induction in children without progressive disease. Children with no residual tumors after induction therapy and no metastatic disease at diagnosis were not to receive radiation therapy unless their tumors progressed. RESULTS Two hundred ninety-nine infants were enrolled. Forty-two percent of patients responded to induction chemotherapy. At 5 years from study entry, the EFS rate was 27% +/- 3%, and the survival rate was 43% +/- 3%. There was no significant difference between the two arms in terms of response rate or EFS. For medulloblastoma, supratentorial primitive neuroectodermal tumor, ependymoma, and rhabdoid tumors, 5-year EFS rates were 32% +/- 5%, 17% +/- 6%, and 32% +/- 6%, and 14% +/- 7%, respectively. Fifty-eight percent of patients who were alive 5 years after study entry had not received radiation therapy. CONCLUSION Intensified induction chemotherapy resulted in a high response rate of malignant brain tumors in infants. Survival was comparable to that of previous studies, and most patients who survived did not receive radiation therapy.


Cancer | 1994

A phase II trial of preirradiation carboplatin in newly diagnosed germinoma of the central nervous system

Jeffrey C. Allen; Robert DaRosso; Bernadine Donahue; Anita Nirenberg

Background. Central nervous system (CNS) germinomas respond readily to both radiotherapy and chemotherapy. This study was designed to selectively reduce the dose of radiotherapy in those patients expressing a complete response (CR) to neoadjuvant carboplatin.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1996

Influence of an oligodendroglial component on the survival of patients with anaplastic astrocytomas: A report of radiation therapy oncology group 83-02

Bernadine Donahue; Charles Scott; James S. Nelson; Marvin Rotman; Kevin Murray; Diana F. Nelson; Franklin L. Banker; John D. Earle; Jennifer Fischbach; Sucha O. Asbell; Laurie E. Gaspar; Arnold M. Markoe; W.J. Curran

PURPOSE Seven percent of patients with high grade gliomas enrolled in RTOG 83-02 had mixed astrocytoma/oligodenroglial elements on central pathology review. It has often been assumed that the most aggressive histologic component of a tumor determines biologic behavior; however in this trial, the survival of patients who had mixed glioblastomas/oligodenrogliomas was significantly longer than that of patients with pure glioblastomas (GBM). We therefore evaluated the effect of an oligodendroglial component on the survival of patients who had anaplastic astrocytomas (AAF) treated in the same trial. METHODS AND MATERIALS One hundred nine patients who had AAF and 24 patients with mixed AAF/oligodendrogliomas (AAF/OL) were enrolled in a Phase I/II trial of randomized dose-escalation hyperfractioned radiotherapy plus BCNU. AAF/OL patients were older and more likely to have had more aggressive surgery than AAF patients. Other pretreatment characteristics were balanced between groups, as was assigned treatment. RESULTS The median survival time for AAF was 3.0 years versus 7.3 years for AAF/OL (p = 0.019). In a multivariate analysis, adjusting for extent of surgical resection and age, an oligodendroglial component was an independent prognostic factor for survival. CONCLUSION The results support the concept that AAFs with an oligodendroglial component have a better prognosis than pure AAF tumors, similar to the effect seen among patients with glioblastoma multiforme tumors. This better survival outcome should be taken into consideration in the design and stratification of future trials. Additionally, in contrast to patients with GBMs, patients who have AAF/OL have the potential for prolonged survival; therefore, late sequelae of treatment (both radiation and chemotherapy) must be weighed more heavily in the benefits to risks analysis.


Melanoma Research | 2013

Ipilimumab in melanoma with limited brain metastases treated with stereotactic radiosurgery.

Maya Mathew; M. Tam; Patrick A. Ott; Anna C. Pavlick; Stephen Rush; Bernadine Donahue; John G. Golfinos; Erik Parker; Paul P. Huang; Ashwatha Narayana

The anti-cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated antigen 4 (CTLA-4) monoclonal antibody ipilimumab has been shown to improve survival in patients with metastatic non-CNS melanoma. The purpose of this study was to investigate the efficacy of CTLA-4 inhibitors in the treatment of metastatic melanoma with limited brain metastases treated with stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS). Between January 2008 and June 2011, 58 patients with limited brain metastases from melanoma were treated with SRS with a median dose of 20 Gy delivered to the 50% isodose line (range, 15–20 Gy). In 25 patients, ipilimumab was administered intravenously at a dose of 3 mg/kg over 90 min every 3 weeks for a median of four doses (range, 1–8). Local control (LC), freedom from new brain metastases, and overall survival (OS) were assessed from the date of the SRS procedure. The median LC, freedom from new brain metastases, and OS for the entire group were 8.7, 4.3, and 5.9 months, respectively. The cause of death was CNS progression in all but eight patients. Six-month LC, freedom from new brain metastases, and OS were 65, 35, and 56%, respectively, for those who received ipilimumab and 63, 47, and 46% for those who did not (P=NS). Intracranial hemorrhage was noted in seven patients who received ipilimumab compared with 10 patients who received SRS alone (P=NS). In this retrospective study, administration of ipilimumab neither increased toxicity nor improved intracerebral disease control in patients with limited brain metastases who received SRS.


Cancer | 1997

Thyroid dysfunction as a late effect in survivors of pediatric medulloblastoma/Primitive neuroectodermal tumors†

Daisy Chin; Charles A. Sklar; Bernadine Donahue; Naveen Uli; Nancy Geneiser; Jeffrey C. Allen; Anita Nirenberg; Raphael David; Brenda Kohn; Sharon E. Oberfield

Primary hypothyroidism is a common sequela of craniospinal radiotherapy in the treatment of pediatric brain tumors.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1996

Hyperfractionated craniospinal radiotherapy and adjuvant chemotherapy for children with newly diagnosed medulloblastoma and other primitive neuroectodermal tumors

Jeffrey C. Allen; Bernadine Donahue; Robert DaRosso; Anita Nirenberg

PURPOSE This single-institution Phase III study conducted from 1989 to 1995 evaluates the feasibility of a multimodality protocol combining hyperfractionated craniospinal radiotherapy (HFRT) followed by adjuvant chemotherapy in 23 patients with newly diagnosed primitive neuroectodermal tumors (PNET) arising in the central nervous system. METHODS AND MATERIALS All 23 patients had a histologically confirmed PNET and were over 3 years of age at diagnosis. The eligibility criteria for PNET patients with cerebellar primaries (medulloblastoma) included either a high T stage (T3b or 4) or high M stage (M1-3). All patients with noncerebellar primaries were eligible regardless of T or M stage. The median age of the 23 patients was 9 years (mean 3-25); 11 were female. The primary tumor arose in the cerebellum in 19. Of these medulloblastoma patients, 15 had high T stages (T3b or T4) with large locally invasive tumors and no evidence of metastases (M0), constituting Group 1. Thirteen (86%) of these patients had gross total resections. Four other medulloblastoma patients had both high T and high M stages, constituting Group 2. Group 3 consisted of four other patients with exocerebellar primaries (two brain, one brain stem, and one cauda equina), three of whom were M3. Hyperfractionated radiotherapy was administered within 4 weeks of surgery. Twice-daily 1-Gy fractions were administered separated by 4-6 h. The total dose to the primary intracranial tumor and other areas of measurable intracranial disease was 72 Gy. The prophylactic craniospinal axis dose was 36 Gy, and boosts of 44-56 Gy were administered to metastatic spinal deposits. Following radiotherapy, monthly courses of multiagent chemotherapy were administered sequentially (cyclophosphamide-vincristine followed by cisplatin-etoposide followed by carboplatin-vincristine) for a total of 9 months. RESULTS All patients completed radiotherapy as planned. Only three patients lost >10% of their body weight. One patient had clinically apparent radiation-induced esophagitis. The mean white blood count (WBC) nadir was 2.5/dl, and hematologic recovery occurred in all within 4 weeks of completing HFRT without the need of granulocyte-colony-stimulating factor. Two patients refused adjuvant chemotherapy, 3 patients experienced tumor progression during chemotherapy, and 2 of 18 remaining patients could not tolerate the full 9 months owing to hematologic toxicity. Of the 15 patients (93%) in Group 1, 14 remain in continuous remission for a median of 78 months, and none have died. Two of four patients in Group 2 are in continuous remission at 67 and 35 months, and two died at 18 and 30 months. One of the two patients in Group 2 who died refused adjuvant chemotherapy and developed tumor progression in the bone marrow. None of the three patients in Group 3 with evaluable disease (M3) had a complete response to therapy, and eventually all four died of progressive or recurrent disease. CONCLUSION This multimodality protocol is feasible in the short term, and long-term monitoring of neurocognitive and neuroendocrine effects are in progress. Excellent long-term disease control has been achieved for medulloblastoma patients with high T stages who were M0 at diagnosis (Group 1), the majority of whom had gross total resections. This group has a progression-free survival of 95% after a median period of follow-up of 6.5 years. Alternative treatment strategies must be developed for patients with high M stages, as five of seven patients died of progressive or recurrent disease.


Pediatric Neurosurgery | 1992

Short- and Long-Term Complications of Radiation Therapy for Pediatric Brain Tumors

Bernadine Donahue

Brain tumors are the second most common malignancy of childhood after acute lymphocytic leukemia. Improvements in therapy have led to increased survival. It is estimated that by the year 2000 there will be approximately 200,000 survivors of childhood cancer. A proportion of these will have survived a central nervous system malignancy. As more children survive, complications of treatment are increasingly recognized. This paper reviews the spectrum of radiation-induced complications, both short- and long-term. Their frequency and characteristics will be reviewed as well as suggestions made to decrease their incidence.


Urology | 1991

PULMONARY EMBOLIZATION OF IODINE-125 SEEDS FOLLOWING PROSTATE IMPLANTATION

Alan D. Steinfeld; Bernadine Donahue; Leonard Plaine

The optimal treatment of prostatic carcinoma limited to the gland remains controversial. Treatment has included implantation of Iodine-125 seeds via both a suprapubic approach and, more recently, a transperineal technique utilizing ultrasound guidance. We recently have noted a heretofore unreported complication with this latter technique, namely, embolization of seeds to the lungs. Review of the chest x-ray films of 31 patients who underwent suprapubic implants showed no evidence of this phenomenon. One of 5 patients undergoing transperineal implant was found to have seeds lodged in the lung. Complications surrounding the various treatments of localized prostate carcinoma are reviewed.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1995

Restrictive lung disease following treatment for malignant brain tumors: a potential late effect of craniospinal irradiation.

Regina I. Jakacki; Craig M. Schramm; Bernadine Donahue; Francois Haas; Jeffrey C. Allen

PURPOSE To examine the effects of lomustine (CCNU), a commonly used nitrosourea, and craniospinal radiation therapy on the subsequent development of restrictive lung disease (RLD) following treatment for malignant brain tumors. PATIENTS AND METHODS Pulmonary function testing with measurement of lung volume, spirometry, and diffusion capacity was performed in 28 patients who had received CCNU and/or radiation therapy as treatment for a malignant brain tumor. The median age at the time of treatment was 11.4 years (range, 3.9 to 36.7) and radiation therapy was completed 6 months to 11.6 years (median, 2.6 years) before testing. Patients were divided into four groups based on prior therapy. Group 1 received involved-field irradiation and a CCNU-containing chemotherapy regimen (n = 7); group 2, craniospinal irradiation with a boost to the primary tumor site and a CCNU-containing chemotherapy regimen (n = 6); group 3, craniospinal irradiation with a boost to the primary tumor site and a non-CCNU-containing chemotherapy regimen (n = 7); and group 4, craniospinal irradiation with a boost to the primary tumor site without chemotherapy (n = 8). RESULTS Fourteen patients (50%) had findings consistent with RLD. One of seven patients (14.3%) who received CCNU without spinal irradiation had RLD, whereas 13 of 21 (61.9%) who received spinal irradiation with or without CCNU had RLD (P = .038), including four of eight patients treated with craniospinal irradiation alone. Logistic regression analysis showed that only spinal irradiation was a significant predictor for RLD. Patients who received spinal irradiation were 4.3 times more likely to have RLD than those who did not receive spinal irradiation. CONCLUSION Spinal irradiation may be a risk factor for the development of RLD.

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Jay S. Cooper

Maimonides Medical Center

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James M. Boyett

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Anita Nirenberg

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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